Hammond Times, Volume 15, Number 192, Hammond, Lake County, 6 February 1922 — Page 1
THE WEATHER 6uerji, fjr tonight ana Tueiaj; colder tonight. ri- bT Carr.rs I HmoBa na w. Hammoad COo r.r monta on ireets and nw ituii, 30 p,r -op,.
COUNTY
World's News by LN.S. Leased Wire VOL. XV. NO. 192, FEBRUARY (, 1922. JIAMMOND, IN7?UKA ATTi
CARDINAL
POPE ON
7TH BALLOT
IWE TRtA i
TRULY GREAT EVEMENT SAYS HARD Shorn of Drastic Features Last Meeting Extremely Business-Like RT KAnnr i,. noc-TrTTw STArf CORRESPONDENT . N, Sr.P.VlC&I lOT!ETM. 111.1.. WMU(it O, lK. file WakiitMn eonffrCf, In ftn "trnlr greaf r hfe-vi-menf-." hnn takrn the flr-it llg forward Mrp lonanl te permanent otttlnwry of war rd i.r ata)illbnint tt unhrrwl lae? aiwl cwcorI (vnnonr nation, Tretil'tit IlnrJIns xalil today In furewell addrc. aeH-rei n th thirty odd wirld ti1riSArii who had Jt cwB-elodotf their threa iot h efforts V r ConfT-r nco Irratin. 'Tor torches of nitdmtamitasr Tf Uate.'' tt the prldnt "aad he enlt to slow and encircle the Blcfcr."1 ST GEOUGE R. HOLMES ' "OXTINENTAL HALL, WASHINGTOX, Feb. 6. The Washington con'crencc passed into history today at 11:15 a. wLh th-s echoes of its praise as "the greatest step in h:storr toward world peace" ringing n r ears o? tho chicif figures in the three month? drama.. The end of the long and ardumi? rind was .simple, and lacking in the dramatic tenseness that might b exported to accompany such & mornenttu3 event in the worW's history. It Mas very , much like a group rf tire J wnd happy workmen laying: down their tools after the whistle had blown Is s'S-naliae the end of the day s work. The, final session of- the conference itself wss fhort an extremely busdnesalike. Stgrninsr the five treaties was begun immediately after the conference opened at lu:19 a. m.. and it was completed in half an hour. Then VreMdefft Hardin? toolc the center ol the staff and briefly bespoke his praise and gratitude at the achievements of ibe meeting. There was a solemn hu-h when Hie applause that greeted hi "msrt.s hd died away. Then the U-v. John S. Vbernetlvy. pastor of President Hard ing's chuTcn. a ::trs' rt'- in lid a brief benediction. lessinrr en the works of the j: ley Amid ' - rust! and rtir of Jhe aud--.rnce dwa,vs marks the end of a prayer. -omjd out the voice of Chairman Hughes: "The conference is adjourned sine die. And that was a'.!, the whole sessica larjted an hour and five minutes. T Saturday. February 4th, Henry and Kdiel Ford, in association with Henry !. and Wilfred C Iceland who origlnal-!;-founded the Lincoln jrotor Company, Vok over the entire plants and equipment of that Cimpany.This is believed to be the beginning ol" what is expected to result in one of the most far reacjiinj affiliations i'l the motor car industry; on one end (he tremendous Ford, institutions turning cut a million or more motor vehicles a juar, and on the other end the Iceland t-iiit Lincoln, which in a comparatively short time has forged its way to the . front as probably the finest constructed V.r the wrld has ever seen. It brings to the Lincoln CSompany I ord's almost limitless resources, arid !Hk of finances was the only handicap tt-e Lincoln Motor Company had ever experienced. It alfO brings together f.vo men who are recognized as un-i-jesUoncd leaders in their respective f.' Ids, lord afl the mister manufacturer II quantity product on, and Henry M. l.eiand as the master of the finest th!iigs mechanical. WhJe the new Lincoln CVmrany be-c.-mrs ai'iiiiatcd with the Ford Motor Compary, the executlxe personnel or t ie two concerns will be heid separate ;,r;d distinct, the managemnt of the L.nooln Company continuing with Henry .M. and Wilfred C. Leland: in fact, this vns cne of the conditions insisted on tv Mr. Ford at the outset of the negotttatlons. An increased manufact'irmg schedule will be inaugurated immediately there heing a large amount of stock in various stages of completion and much vh'ch is finished and ready for asse.mMtng. The former Lincoln manufacturing organization has largely been held intact and preparations were al! ma.de it. advance so that everything would 1o in readiness to go forward as soon as the necessary formalities had been completed. It is apparent that. many persons have been misled into the idea that the lord connection indicates a revolution in policies, particularly as these poli-..-ie concern manufacturing praticen and selling prices: but it is intended tr.nt anyone at all familiar nith fine construction knows the absurdity of any sweeping- reduction in prices for a car of the' Lincoln's chara.ter. Both Mr. Leland and Mr. Ford have emphasized in the strongest possible
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MPORTAN
AUTOMOBILE
MATHS
CContinue-d n Tae. Si?)
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WHEN TRAIN HITS AUTO Two in en. both believed to be Whiting rsident, -were killed instantly at the Subway, G'ibson. nl 1 ; 1 0 thia afternoon when the truck in which they were riding was struck, ty a fast west Michigan' Central train. llnough of the truck was left intact, to enable prli--o to picre together the j identification license card carried on the wind ahieM. This bore the name i of Andrew Z!a.teriih, 50S John street, j Whiting. j At a. late hour this afternoon neither j of the men had be-u ide.-;liried, but i P'lii'e bd'eie one of them may be j O'i a t r r ; s h. The tiiem evidently were returning irom East Cliicasro. Their truck was empty. They had gotten as far as the l'orsythe avenru crossing at Gibson when the Volertne Special, due in Hammond at 1 p. m. crept down upon them. The truck etruck square j amidships. The vietirr-s were tossed more than 100 feet. So terrific was the impart that repairs to the locomotive had to be made before the train could proceed. Hammond rlice removed tbe bodies to Eurns Mcrsue. J. B. Clark, general yard master and "VT. J. Delaney, both employed at Gibtxm, witnessed the accident. TRftlfl HITS AllTfl3 LEAP TO SOT Touring Car at Riverside Is Stalled on Illinois Central Crossing. f;XN?ING, IIjTj.. Feb. 6 Three men! saved the'.r lives last night at River-i dale, 111-, when they jumped from aj touring- ear in which they were stalled on the Illinois Central grade crossing. Just before the Fecond section of the , Chii -agtv-Kew Orleans Limited crashed into and demolished the car. The vatchman saw the men jump and disappear n the confusion which followed The automobile, a heavy and costly machine, was smashed to fragments an the front of the en sine was wrecked: - . so tn.-'t progress or trie tram was ac-: layed nearly an hour. FAMILY VICTIMS F GAS POISONING The strange malady that has since Saturday nauseated and made deathly sick members of the Hanagan family at St Hickory street, thi morning culminated in the sudden collapse of l.rothjr Hanatran, aged fix years, while ehe was seated at tho breakfast table. Vr. E. A. Gilson, first to arrive, treated the child for gas poisoning. He , tound the home filled with gas. Others i members of the family bay they have ! been ill for several dajs. They were ! first stricken fcaturday -when all or 1 I them became nauseated and violently I j ill. It was at first thought they were j i victims of ptomaine poisoning. The j i illness passed off temporarily only to I I reoccur with greater virulence this j j morning. j Tn the basement of the hoote, Mr. I i Hawaiian discovered an open valve lead-j j !ng from an abandoned gas main in j j Hickory st- It is thought gas escap- j j ing from the apparently unused main j was responsible for the sickness of the 1am!Iy. Officials of the gas company immediately dispatched workers to ea! the pipe. According-to Dr. Gllson the little girl 's not seriously ' ill. Other members of the family will recover froni the bad -Certs of their near asphyxiation within a few days, he says. Hanagan is an insurance a ent for t the Metropolitan Insurance Co. ACCUSES GOVERNOR . OF BETRAYING HER j . JACKprtv. MISS.. Feb. 6 Miss Fran- ; ft C. Birkhead, former stenographer J tor Governor Icnssell. of Mississippi, j today filed suit here against the gov. j ernor asking fid, 000. Miss Birkhead I aileges the was betrayed by the governor. "FLU" HITS CHICAGO HARD TODAY p NTER N AT1 CN AL NE'AS SE.RV1CEI CHK'AltO. Feb. 6 be-, enty new flu cases have been reported in the last 4? viours. the health department an.'loiiiic: I :0'!;i , l'UANK SPUN CEi: 'and Hussfij Burke have formed partnership in an automobile repair "and acewsttrtes shop In the National Tire and Supply cornpapv, Hammond.
REPUBLICAN PEACE-MAKER C 1 4 V ? jT Ct.VnB CUlVELANn, Attorney Clyde Cleveland, republican chairman of Hammond, is the "harmony" candidate for county chairman.; There Is a growing rent imc-n in t' e( county that the party needs a "peace, maker" who will repair any breaches ; that may haie resulted from thj bit-, ter city elections last taU. , Attorney Cleveland has the knaclt ; of gettins people to .work tocether !n on" accord. His friends declare he tan; he relied upon to give e'f ry candidate i a square deal. WILL RULING D j Federal Judge Clayton Holds That Having: Lii nno-n Tn Poccocoinn Tc Wrtt ! a XJrime. j Interest being: taken in Gary and other cities of Lake county where , monthly hundreds of liquor cases are 1 difpoKed of in the courts, in a recent. t rutin? hand'd down by Federal Judjre; f Henry l. Clayton, who held that the; ! mere pos mere possession or liquor was not a I violation of the prohibition law s. Accorama; to news uispannrs imm I ,A-t-. 1 T.l-i TltltJ-rt I'lil'lrt Vila " u-v.,. ......
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quar.hcd indictments against - fourteen ectlon r-T Mr. Morsan. He has made 1 Jacksonville men ineluding teeral,;in envitble reputation in the last year i prominent in financial and industrial : through working up conspiracy capes circles who were accused of having j and it is probable much of his time operated a "whiskey ring-." henceforth will be taken with such I New indictments charging violation matters. His most notable achieve-' of the prohibition laws Mere returned j jne.nt outbid" of tne Take county con-' J against twelve of then later in the . wpl-aey cases tias his baring of the ' ; cay by the federal grand jury and two) well known whiskey ring of which1
f them. I:. L Wheeler, former chairj r.iau of the Board of L'iiectors of tbe j Ousrantee Trust and Savings Bank, and j. 1;. Merrill, member of a .shipbuilding j pm-., were exonerated. J Jurtge Clayton, in his decision order. j trig the origins ' held that they indictments quashed. ; vere "fatrlly defec-j ti'. e" be eh use thev did not charge that 1 the liquor had been illegally manufa - ) tared or held -for transportation, sale. or similar violation of the prohibition j la.ws alleging merely that it. was he hi " m violation of" tho law. '. - COLUMBIA AVE. BOOSTERS
HOLD MEETINGlake CO.
Columbia aven'te's future as one of Hammond's main "thoroughfares and a business street of importance was discussed a' a nice-ting of property owners h'-id Ntrrday afternoon at Columbia ha!! in Last Hammond. Widening, an.d navine of the iitrci a sv';way under the Michigan Centra, tracks, a. new se w r and pos.-rbi changes in the water main were among the topics o'kcu.ss rd. Action h;i5 atrejidy been started looking towards the pavement, of the street by the county under a plavi r.lm-i'-ar-to the Cabimct a enue pavement. Howe.-er, before the .street, is paved, a uniform width must be decided upon by the 7riperty ounfrs. The city mu.--t also look into the future ,-euer needs of the district tapped 'by Columb a averue. It is believed tlwit. a newsewer of much greater capac ty is necessary. 'The county commissioners wilt not permit the paving to be done until the sewer work has been completed for at least six month. This gives the foundation time to settle. Heso.ille had a delegation at the nifeting. They insisted that since tlheir territory bad been annexed by Hammond they must have the water, gas. sewer- and electric service furnished to other parts of the city.- The city officials have been considering the extension of the large writer main south from Huehn avenue in Hammond to HessviUe. This improvement will have to be mad. before the paving is done unlcf!- the trunk line is placed at one side of the street. It wns decided to hold a second rri'.eting of property owners n-xs "Wedi-Fday even in g " a t Brooks House in Last Hammond. j JOF. HABTLLT says Bill" S' inlte j 1 is the be?t ft.lag hand in tills part: jof the country. A lot of the u-: Uesr-vs j is.ay the same thins
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SUSPECTS HELD Marly this mormnt two men who. irrordini; t. I,. (.'. tJrubli, principal of the W'hifine hiKh school, answered the li.i-c.riptlon of two of the men tigurin ii tiv W'liitinpr mail robbery last Wrdn-'sday mornins, were, amjted by a P.. t O. C. T. railroad (If teethe, J. J. Mctzar, iti the Km-t Chicaaio railroad yards find bookei at the past Chicago s-tfition as ausp::t-us characters. Tin' two men Brave their names as Wm, Hardy, Tiurk liurnett. Texas, anil Kdsrar Ilowds, 43:i Ptue street, Hammond. A police officer from the Whiting department vifdtintf the lait ftliicago jail this mornin-f. was cntisfied that there two rnen were members of the Whiting mail bnndits,, and ni Jested that t hey e h.id for the feder-il aut hot-it 'cs who are rsjK rterl in the city today. LAKE CO. 1 hen r.ert Morgan, state direcWr of prohibition enforcement, xeturned to indianapolis on Saturday evefiinp. ILakf: county's quota of aprxiintnie.nU to oft.ce In his department had been exhausted. Lake county can expect no more, unices' of course, sume of her soils now holding jobs reaisru or are dismissed. ; Mr. Morgan nulla Uiat plain. ! ili i.innouncement of ti.e elevation i of i.'eorpe Vee! of tiary to the r('t ' of c hief of the Northern Ir.dtana group i of agents came after a loos line of asI p-rants had been held in suspense for ; fix months. j "Lake county caused me more trouble than any other part of the state in ! selecting a rents," nni Mr. Morgan. "I ;m allowed only twenty agentd for the entire state so you see lake county in ' setting two of the jobs was ren i much more than its just share." probably be some more agents appointed for the Northern Indiana district but. they would come from other counties. They tvi! work oat of Hammond as headquarters. Gus - famous who held the post of chief prior to the appointment of Mr. week will remain in Hammond until ! cases in which he is Interested r.a been tried in the courts. H" will then . pive his attention 10 matters in on- ! .-.-. ' V. n .of. .mA. ,Cicui j-iia j. .-,t., u-.i v.. Kcmus of Cincinnati was the head. SERIOUSLY ILL CLOWN POINT. IXn.. Feb. 6 Ralph Bradford, county treasurer, is (seriously ill at his home of tonsiliti.s. The in- ! fection has extended through the I throat and nostrils. Pr. Iddings. the : attending physician, spjent the night i at the bedside of the patient. No one ! is permitted to see him and friends j not lo' telephone ' j have beer, requested I tho house. T "Come in held costume,"' Thrse words were, appended to the in it a,t ions wiiich were !-tit out. summoning sportsmen of 1 1 ke county to the February session of the Luke County Fish & Came Protective Association which wi.il b- held this evening in the basement of the J. W. Millikan sporting goods store in Hammond. That means that the rislic-men and hunters will wear the toirs in wlm-h they have done their greatest deeds. It in believed this atmosphere of the Held will stimulate the memories and tTing forth greater stories of rod and gun than might otherwise be recalled. Stories, you know, are an Important feature of every session of the hsh and game dan. L T. Meyer, the new president will be in charge. He promises some new stunts for this evening and it was at his suggestion that the members are todny airing out the'r field uniforms. A (special speaker. AW M. Garlington, of Chicago, Is on the program. Garlington is a writer for the "Outdoor" maKazine and is a prominent figure in the .sporting world.; He is a member of the Adventurers Club of Fhirago. He ili speak this c cning on hunting deer ana wild turkey in the I lv era lades of Florida. Ilet rcsliuien t s and smokes wiil wind un thv meet in?. SO far no "flu" cases had beer re-1 ported to B. C. board of health. It is belie cd that Last Chicago will escape, this epidemic, . J
CAUSES
HI
TROUBLE
COUNTY TREASURER
SPORTSMEN
MEET T0N1GH
FILM STAR WITNESS. AT INQUEST OF MURDER VICTIM
:srTT?rT
9 t- c t iV"' '".Jr & v t Mabel
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Film Star Accused of Kidnapping Girl New Scandal Unearthed as Detectives Search for Slayer of William Desmond Taylor and Hysterical Girl Is Found in Canyon
BY WALLACE SMITH. International Xewf Service Special Correspondent. Copyright 1&22 By I. N. S. Copyright 1P22 by Chicago Lvenin; America n. IaS ANGELF.5. Fob. 6. Revolting sear-da! awakened the wilder young set of the film world again today as detectives, hunting desperately for mmc clew to the laying of William Pesmond Taylor, began a search for a young woman named "Osrothy" and a party of drug-maddened men who kidnapped her ear';- today at the mouth of Horse Shoe canyon. The girl, hysterical and half str'.pned of he- -lothinz. and this; charged with ahducting her, disappeared somewhere in the maze of private studios and "party" bungalows of the Hollywood, according to the sheriff's men who first took up the chase. It was while deputies of Lie sheriff's off re were quizzing these irJspecis In the Taylor slaving three men linked with nnnds trafficking in drugs that the call came from Horse Shoe canyon, a few mile., from Hollywood. Dweller a. near the mouth of the canyon had found a sobbing, drug-broken glri stumbling down the traii. H-r clothes had been shredded and she was half naked. Automobile .blankets were thrown around her and an effort made to quiet h'-r.
Flatest bulletins
(BULLETIN) r 11 r F R N A T ! O N A 1, NtS STRVICEl SAN FRANCISCO. Feb. 6. Search vas underway today by detectives and police for Zcy Frevon and Alice Clake. show girl witnesses in the case of Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle. in order that they may be served with subpoenas which will insure their attendance on the third trial of the film star for manslaughter. , , (BULLETIN) ' IStERNATIONAL NEWS SESVICTl LOS ANGELES. Calif.. Feb. 6. Out of the waze of clues gleaned from the stray ends of the tangled skein of William Desmond Taylor's love affair, which the slain man, a popular screen actress and a scion of a wealthy eastern family are said to have played the leading rolef. (BULLETIN) MNTrRNAriON NEWS 'SERVICE ! CHICAGO. Feb. 6. Miss Mildred Van Vliet. 19. is in a critical condition at a hospital today as the result of an attempt at suicide by drinking poison. Despondency over her failure to find work as a musician is believed to have led her to attempt to end her ife. Her mother is said to be living in Indianapolis. WASHINGTON. FeS. 6. Mi? Carolyn Upshaw, 16 year old high
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Normand. "They did tis to me up ;n the ca.bin," the cried "They gave me things to drink iind then tiuy tor my clothes off." One of thoe irh.i found the girl hurried 1.1 a telephone and called the sheriff. A squad cf men was rushed to the spot by motor. Before they arrived another ni icl.ine drove up. Out of it piled .it !e;tsi three men, according t " ttn:."srs. Two of them were recognized as actors of considerable prominence, it was declared, who had made one of the cabin's a rendezvous for week-end debaucheries (,f the wildest description. The eirl .-iir!e'r..--d as they approached, reeling and cursing. "Let that girl go.-' .ai.i one of them. "Don't you see lie's hysterical '.' We'U take care, of ii-vr. Then the three made a ruli. Before the Tlorse S'!io. injii-m dwellers could e-top them the automobile hid nvtde off. Ti ltii the yr.iincr woman still I screaming. The deputies arrived in a I few minutes Inter, rind leaving one of J their number bhind 10 investigate, tooa up the traii of the fleeing automobile. They made ready today fo qiisti-n the men said to have been recognized by those who sought to shelter the young woman. One of the wiinesses rr memiicre. that tho glr! hud given her name as "Dorothy." They didn't remember fie last name. school student, and a niece of Congressinah L'pshaw of Georgia, died at Garfield hospital this morning, a victim of the Knickerbooker tlieatie crash. Her death brings the tolal casualty li?t of the disaster to 97. MILAN. Feb. b. Cardinal Manni. an Italian prelate, who was carried into the Vatican while .seriously ill of influenza to partipate in the. papal election, died in his quarters in the Sistine chapel, according to an unconfirmed report from Rome to the Cirricrc Delia Sera today. WRIGHT IS ACQUITTED; JURY 0UT10 MINUTES Hammond Officer Cleared of Murder Charge at Crown .Point. IT.OU'.V POINT. tr.. Feb. 6 Jack Wright, Hammond poiice oftiqer. chafgc.F with n:,ns!:i u !, t r in t h - l.ili'ng of Clco 1'uton. -hi.it to death nt (he wheel of hi"- .u.toi'ifihil.' because he rc fused to he. d tile rrc;.irt-ry m-ocr vf the i utrolmait to halt, was acquitted -f the charge by a jury in Judge Martin Smith's court. The jury w a-s out ten rrinutj?. "Wright was defended by Joe Cojiroy, Ilarr.mo.Tj attorney.
NEW PONTIFF KNOWN AS PIUS I
Prelate Had Been Chosen Cardinal at Consistory Less Than a Year Ago I-ovff- C0?E2fCNCENT I. N. SERVICS J.OML. 1-ej,. 6 Caroinal Bat-; archbishop of .Mjlan. was todav eler,,.,j rope of the Roman Catrolic church, on Lhe seventh ballot. Cardinal Kattt is ovtr sixty rears age and ho was chosen a cardinal le.-s tnan a year ago, at the last consistorv He is a native r.f Milan. '"White smoke began .ssulng Lo;., the chimm-v vf tho .Sistine chape; a! n.S3 o'clock a, rn.," said a Uci.t-r despa t ch . , nh,t?' f!J' thi s.gr.1 c? e., e.iect;e,n; blacls rmoke is the signal or no election. Ratti was a cardfriat, of the so-caV-ei "peace- party which favors rcconfiliation between the Vdtican and thItalian state. Cardinal F.atti was one of the tear-, veil known prelates who participate' in the s'olcmn balloting ai the Vatican although he was veil known in high circles and waa cloai to the late pope. Shortly after 12 o'clock the new pontiff. Pope riu. XI as he will be known after he is formally crowned, stepped upon the Vatican baleorv fronting St. Peters' square. The vat crow d which hi led the iorecourt k'i t in reverence to receive the papal blessing. .The Italian soldiers present; arms during the ceremony. Announcement wsa made that the new pontiff had chosen the name t " Pius XI and he will be known by this title so lonsr as lie occupies the chair of St. Peters. Kaoh cardinal in the conclave is supposed to have chosen in his own mind the name he will bo officially known, by to that in the event of election, he can make it. known at once. It is customary, immediately after the announcement of an election fr,r tliiee cardinals to lead the new sovereign pontiff into the robing- room' a'' jacent to the Sistine chapel wh -three sets of papal robes are laid One is of large (size, one mediur f one ia small. The'variatlons an so that no matter what the eta j . the new sovereign pontiff he will fiDd the robes to fit him. In olJen times there were eiabora-. rites and ceremonies through whiert the new pope wns conducted followinghis elevation to the mightiest and lioliest office of the Roman church. But of these the only one that remains tithe coronation. The new pontiff will te crownc.l within the next week and cardinals, now enroute for Rom? who were unable to get here in time for the conclave election, will be at hand fcr the elaborate coronation rites. The popes date their pontificate from the day they assume, their tiara rather than from the date of election by the conclave of cardinals. When the pope is crowned, he receives als the famous fisherman's ring. which bears the great see! of the Vatican and is symbolic of tho wearer's high offhc It is not removed until death when i is broken up and remoulded. ' T'.o chief ceremonies of tho papal coron.) lion take place in the Sistine chapel where the elections are conducted. Before the conclave last Thursda the name of Cardinal Battt bad be- h mentioned more or less conspicuous! v as tho candidate of the reconcllatt jn faction headed by Cardinal CJa spa rr : ? t papal secretary of state. Cardina' Oa.parri and his adherents pledged themselves to carry out the political policy of the late Benedict XV which was to renew, friendly relations with the quirtnal without impairing the international prestige of the church. Tt was understood that Cardinal Maffi. arch bi. shop of Pisa, was favored by the non-rcoonci!iabl faction, le 1 by Cardinal Merry Del Val . Cardinal Batti is a comparatively young man as Roman Catholic cardinals go. His early lifo was spent in the mountains cf northern Italy where he built up a robust constitution. For some, time Cardinal Battt ws envoy of the Vatican at Warsaw, Poland. By taking the r.n.rie of Pius, the new pontiff has show n his preference for designation that has "teen a favort' with occupsnrs of t'n cha of Pct;-r. The nont'.f? before Fenedt.-r XV was Pius X. He occupied the Vai-ic-an from 1903tjlP14. Balloting ior the n'-w pope hepa;; Friday morning, tvo bai.ots were taken Friday, two cn Saturday, and tw i on Sunday. The regular morning ballot was taken this morning aa usual. As ballot after ballot was taken ard the black smoke announced "no chot-e ' the belief became virvnlv fixed that nei'her of the powerful factions of t ie Sacred College would be able to w:,i over the other and that a compromise candidate seemed certain. When the week end passed without a choice on Sunday, interest grew to fever heat. Advices from the seat of election satd that the big test crowd since the conclave opened was gathered In the great square flanking St. Peters. There was a feeling of expectancy the deadlock was about, to be broken, probably through a compromise. Stand In Line for Reserved Seats At 9 o'clock this morninff there wa a line of peotple in the foyer of the Parthenon theater wa'ting for the bo office to open so that they might sec-ire recc-'vationa for the Knights of Columbus miiit'trel shrfiw, Thursday and Friday. Fine! rehearsal' svii! h.- tiehi Mr,,, oa, Tuesday ana WfJu'iti. - n!,-"H Pireiior flerber i-avs that . tiiiow in ureat fhape. Tickets are on Fale at the TT5 mt::0!i.j Candy Kitchen. Iloliman street. Am;strong' Jewelry store, Carroll n J Ncwtons and KiUiXnaui's,
